From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fiji coups of 1987 resulted in the
overthrow of the elected government of Fijian Prime
Minister Timoci Bavadra, the deposition of Elizabeth II as Queen of Fiji, and in the declaration of a
republic. The first coup, in which Bavadra was deposed, took place
on May 14, 1987; a second coup on September 28 ended the Fijian
Monarchy, and was shortly followed by the proclamation of a republic on October 7. Both
military actions were led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni
Rabuka, then third in command of the Royal Fiji
Military Forces. Depending on perspective, one may view the
event either as two successive coups d'état separated
by a four-month intermission, or as a single coup begun on May 14
and completed with the declaration of the republic.
Background
Both before and after Fiji gained its independence from the United Kingdom in
1970, tensions between the indigenous Fijian and Indo-Fijian ethnic groups (comprising an
estimated 46% and 49% of the 1987 population, respectively)
continually manifested themselves in social and political unrest.
Parliamentary elections in April 1987
resulted in the replacement of the indigenous-led Conservative
government of Prime Minister Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara with a
multi-ethnic Labour-led coalition supported mostly
by the Indo-Fijian plurality, and Rabuka claimed
ethnic Fijian concerns of racial
discrimination as his excuse for seizing power. Many
authorities doubt the veracity of this, however, given existing
constitutional guarantees.
Coups
d'etat
On the morning of May 14, a section of ten masked, armed
soldiers entered the Fijian House
of Representatives and subdued the national legislature, which
had gathered there for its morning session. Rabuka, dressed in
civilian clothes, approached Prime Minister Timoci Bavadra
from his position in the public gallery and ordered the Members of Parliament to leave the
building. They did so without resisting. The coup was an apparent
success, and had been accomplished without loss of life.
The matter was not settled there, however. As a Commonwealth Realm, Fiji's Head of
State was the Queen of Fiji, Elizabeth II. The Fijian Supreme
Court ruled the coup unconstitutional, and the Queen's
representative, Governor-General Ratu Sir
Penaia Ganilau, unsuccessfully attempted to assert executive
power. He opened negotiations known as the Deuba Talks with both
the deposed government, and the Alliance Party,
which most indigenous Fijians supported. These negotiations
culminated in the Deuba Accord of 23 September 1987, which provided
for a government of national unity, in which both parties would be
represented under the leadership of the Governor-General. Fearing
that the gains of the first coup were about to be lost, Rabuka
staged a second coup on September 25.
International
involvement
Australia and New Zealand, the two
nations with foremost political influence in the region, were
somewhat disquieted by the event, but ultimately took no action to
intervene. They did, however, establish a policy of non-recognition
regarding the new government, suspending foreign aid in concert
with the United
States and the United Kingdom.
The Australian labor movement, taking the ousting of a Labor
Party-led government as an affront to the worldwide labor
movement, instituted an embargo against shipments to Fiji. As
Australia was Fiji's largest foreign trading partner, this resulted
in a large diminution in Fiji's international trade.
Aftermath
The United
Nations immediately denounced the coup, demanding that the
former government be restored. On October 7 the new regime declared
Fiji a republic, revoking the 1970 constitution; the Commonwealth responded with
Fiji's immediate expulsion from the association.
A new constitution was ratified in 1990, in which the offices of
President and Prime
Minister, along with two-thirds of the Senate, a substantial
majority of the House of Representatives were reserved for
indigenous Fijians. These discriminatory provisions were eventually
overturned by a constitutional revision in
1997.
The coups triggered much emigration by Indo-Fijians
(particularly skilled workers), making them a minority by 1994.
Even today, Fiji struggles to recover from this loss of necessary
skills.
References
- Elek,
Andrew L.; Hill, Hal; Tabor, Steven R. (May 1993), Liberalization and
Diversification in a Small Island Economy: Fiji Since the 1987
Coups, 21, pp. 749–769, doi:10.1016/0305-750X(93)90031-4, ISSN 0305-750X, OCLC 28399361, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VC6-458XGVJ-67/2/2c47f2827bf04703c7b18c4474c3b734
.
- Lal, Brij V., ed. (2000), Fiji before the
storm: elections and the politics of development, Canberra: Asia Pacific Press
at the Australian National
University, ISBN 0-7315-3650-9,
OCLC 47179422
.
- edited by
Brij V. Lal and Kate Fortune. (2000), Lal, Brij V.; Fortune, Kate, eds., The
Pacific Islands: an encyclopedia, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press,
ISBN 0-8248-2265-X,
OCLC 41445845
.
- Scobell, Andrew
(January 1994), "Politics, Professionalism,
and Peacekeeping: An Analysis of the 1987 Military Coup in
Fiji", Comparative Politics 26 (2):
187–201, ISSN 0010-4159, http://www.jstor.org/pss/422267
.
External
links